debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/development/testing_guide/end_to_end/resources.md

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---
stage: none
group: unassigned
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# Resource class in GitLab QA
Resources are primarily created using Browser UI steps, but can also
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be created via the API or the CLI.
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## How to properly implement a resource class?
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All resource classes should inherit from `Resource::Base`.
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There is only one mandatory method to implement to define a resource class.
This is the `#fabricate!` method, which is used to build the resource via the
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browser UI. Note that you should only use [Page objects](page_objects.md) to
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interact with a Web page in this method.
Here is an imaginary example:
```ruby
module QA
module Resource
class Shirt < Base
attr_accessor :name
def fabricate!
Page::Dashboard::Index.perform do |dashboard_index|
dashboard_index.go_to_new_shirt
end
Page::Shirt::New.perform do |shirt_new|
shirt_new.set_name(name)
shirt_new.create_shirt!
end
end
end
end
end
```
### Define API implementation
A resource class may also implement the three following methods to be able to
create the resource via the public GitLab API:
- `#api_get_path`: The `GET` path to fetch an existing resource.
- `#api_post_path`: The `POST` path to create a new resource.
- `#api_post_body`: The `POST` body (as a Ruby hash) to create a new resource.
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> Be aware that many API resources are [paginated](../../../api/README.md#pagination).
> If you don't find the results you expect, check if there is more that one page of results.
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Let's take the `Shirt` resource class, and add these three API methods:
```ruby
module QA
module Resource
class Shirt < Base
attr_accessor :name
def fabricate!
# ... same as before
end
def api_get_path
"/shirt/#{name}"
end
def api_post_path
"/shirts"
end
def api_post_body
{
name: name
}
end
end
end
end
```
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The `Project` resource is a good real example of Browser
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UI and API implementations.
#### Resource attributes
A resource may need another resource to exist first. For instance, a project
needs a group to be created in.
To define a resource attribute, you can use the `attribute` method with a
block using the other resource class to fabricate the resource.
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That allows access to the other resource from your resource object's
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methods. You would usually use it in `#fabricate!`, `#api_get_path`,
`#api_post_path`, `#api_post_body`.
Let's take the `Shirt` resource class, and add a `project` attribute to it:
```ruby
module QA
module Resource
class Shirt < Base
attr_accessor :name
attribute :project do
Project.fabricate! do |resource|
resource.name = 'project-to-create-a-shirt'
end
end
def fabricate!
project.visit!
Page::Project::Show.perform do |project_show|
project_show.go_to_new_shirt
end
Page::Shirt::New.perform do |shirt_new|
shirt_new.set_name(name)
shirt_new.create_shirt!
end
end
def api_get_path
"/project/#{project.path}/shirt/#{name}"
end
def api_post_path
"/project/#{project.path}/shirts"
end
def api_post_body
{
name: name
}
end
end
end
end
```
**Note that all the attributes are lazily constructed. This means if you want
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a specific attribute to be fabricated first, you must call the
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attribute method first even if you're not using it.**
#### Product data attributes
Once created, you may want to populate a resource with attributes that can be
found in the Web page, or in the API response.
For instance, once you create a project, you may want to store its repository
SSH URL as an attribute.
Again we could use the `attribute` method with a block, using a page object
to retrieve the data on the page.
Let's take the `Shirt` resource class, and define a `:brand` attribute:
```ruby
module QA
module Resource
class Shirt < Base
attr_accessor :name
attribute :project do
Project.fabricate! do |resource|
resource.name = 'project-to-create-a-shirt'
end
end
# Attribute populated from the Browser UI (using the block)
attribute :brand do
Page::Shirt::Show.perform do |shirt_show|
shirt_show.fetch_brand_from_page
end
end
# ... same as before
end
end
end
```
**Note again that all the attributes are lazily constructed. This means if
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you call `shirt.brand` after moving to the other page, it doesn't properly
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retrieve the data because we're no longer on the expected page.**
Consider this:
```ruby
shirt =
QA::Resource::Shirt.fabricate! do |resource|
resource.name = "GitLab QA"
end
shirt.project.visit!
shirt.brand # => FAIL!
```
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The above example fails because now we're on the project page, trying to
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construct the brand data from the shirt page, however we moved to the project
page already. There are two ways to solve this, one is that we could try to
retrieve the brand before visiting the project again:
```ruby
shirt =
QA::Resource::Shirt.fabricate! do |resource|
resource.name = "GitLab QA"
end
shirt.brand # => OK!
shirt.project.visit!
shirt.brand # => OK!
```
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The attribute is stored in the instance, therefore all the following calls
are fine, using the data previously constructed. If we think that this
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might be too brittle, we could eagerly construct the data right before
ending fabrication:
```ruby
module QA
module Resource
class Shirt < Base
# ... same as before
def fabricate!
project.visit!
Page::Project::Show.perform do |project_show|
project_show.go_to_new_shirt
end
Page::Shirt::New.perform do |shirt_new|
shirt_new.set_name(name)
shirt_new.create_shirt!
end
populate(:brand) # Eagerly construct the data
end
end
end
end
```
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The `populate` method iterates through its arguments and call each
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attribute respectively. Here `populate(:brand)` has the same effect as
just `brand`. Using the populate method makes the intention clearer.
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With this, it ensures we construct the data right after we create the
shirt. The drawback is that this always constructs the data when the
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resource is fabricated even if we don't need to use the data.
Alternatively, we could just make sure we're on the right page before
constructing the brand data:
```ruby
module QA
module Resource
class Shirt < Base
attr_accessor :name
attribute :project do
Project.fabricate! do |resource|
resource.name = 'project-to-create-a-shirt'
end
end
# Attribute populated from the Browser UI (using the block)
attribute :brand do
back_url = current_url
visit!
Page::Shirt::Show.perform do |shirt_show|
shirt_show.fetch_brand_from_page
end
visit(back_url)
end
# ... same as before
end
end
end
```
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This ensures it's on the shirt page before constructing brand, and
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move back to the previous page to avoid breaking the state.
#### Define an attribute based on an API response
Sometimes, you want to define a resource attribute based on the API response
from its `GET` or `POST` request. For instance, if the creation of a shirt via
the API returns
```ruby
{
brand: 'a-brand-new-brand',
style: 't-shirt',
materials: [[:cotton, 80], [:polyamide, 20]]
}
```
you may want to store `style` as-is in the resource, and fetch the first value
of the first `materials` item in a `main_fabric` attribute.
Let's take the `Shirt` resource class, and define a `:style` and a
`:main_fabric` attributes:
```ruby
module QA
module Resource
class Shirt < Base
# ... same as before
# @style from the instance if present,
# or fetched from the API response if present,
# or a QA::Resource::Base::NoValueError is raised otherwise
attribute :style
# If @main_fabric is not present,
# and if the API does not contain this field, this block will be
# used to construct the value based on the API response, and
# store the result in @main_fabric
attribute :main_fabric do
api_response.&dig(:materials, 0, 0)
end
# ... same as before
end
end
end
```
**Notes on attributes precedence:**
- resource instance variables have the highest precedence
- attributes from the API response take precedence over attributes from the
block (usually from Browser UI)
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- attributes without a value raises a `QA::Resource::Base::NoValueError` error
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## Creating resources in your tests
To create a resource in your tests, you can call the `.fabricate!` method on
the resource class.
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Note that if the resource class supports API fabrication, this uses this
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fabrication by default.
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Here is an example that uses the API fabrication method under the hood
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since it's supported by the `Shirt` resource class:
```ruby
my_shirt = Resource::Shirt.fabricate! do |shirt|
shirt.name = 'my-shirt'
end
expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.name) # => "my-shirt" from the resource's instance variable
expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.brand) # => "a-brand-new-brand" from the API response
expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.style) # => "t-shirt" from the API response
expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.main_fabric) # => "cotton" from the API response via the block
```
If you explicitly want to use the Browser UI fabrication method, you can call
the `.fabricate_via_browser_ui!` method instead:
```ruby
my_shirt = Resource::Shirt.fabricate_via_browser_ui! do |shirt|
shirt.name = 'my-shirt'
end
expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.name) # => "my-shirt" from the resource's instance variable
expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.brand) # => the brand name fetched from the `Page::Shirt::Show` page via the block
expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.style) # => QA::Resource::Base::NoValueError will be raised because no API response nor a block is provided
expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.main_fabric) # => QA::Resource::Base::NoValueError will be raised because no API response and the block didn't provide a value (because it's also based on the API response)
```
You can also explicitly use the API fabrication method, by calling the
`.fabricate_via_api!` method:
```ruby
my_shirt = Resource::Shirt.fabricate_via_api! do |shirt|
shirt.name = 'my-shirt'
end
```
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In this case, the result is similar to calling `Resource::Shirt.fabricate!`.
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## Where to ask for help?
If you need more information, ask for help on `#quality` channel on Slack
(internal, GitLab Team only).
If you are not a Team Member, and you still need help to contribute, please
open an issue in GitLab CE issue tracker with the `~QA` label.